Not THE winner, mind you, that was Justin Rose. By finishing third, however, Ogilvy not only played his way into next week's Tour Championship, he locked up a spot for the Presidents Cup in his home town of Melbourne, Australia.

BMW CHAMPIONSHIP

The BMW Championship, now in its sixth year, has its roots in the venerable Western Open, which was first played in 1916.

"It's nice. I mean, you come here with the hopes of playing well enough to do that," Ogilvy said Sunday. "All in all, quite satisfied, really."

He should be. After all the projections and number crunching and arrows pointing this way and that, only three players -- Rose, runner-up John Senden and Ogilvy -- moved into the top 30 of the FedExCup standings to earn spots at East Lake, where a victory could be worth $10 million.

That's a lot of money, even for professional athletes. Which might explain why, after finding he was on the wrong side of the cutoff, Camilo Villegas pounded a table so hard it shook the computer sitting on top of it.

In the race for the U.S. Presidents Cup team, the only change in the standings was the order, with Jim Furyk, David Toms and Hunter Mahan all qualifying.

Bill Haas, whose father, Jay, is the team's assistant captain, cost himself an automatic spot with a horrid back nine. Needing to shoot 75 or better, Bill Haas played his last seven holes in 6 over and finished with a 78.

"I was on the phone with Jay Haas a lot today and hoping for the best for Billy," U.S. Captain Fred Couples said in a teleconference Sunday night. "It's a struggle. I've been on these places where you want to make these teams so bad that you actually forget you're trying to win a golf tournament and I think that's what Bill was foremost trying to do today and let everything take care of itself."

Couples already has said he will use one of his picks on Tiger Woods. Couples will announce his final pick after the Tour Championship, with the younger Haas, Brandt Snedeker and Keegan Bradley among the favorites.

"There's Presidents Cup stories, FedExCup stories, and just this golf tournament ... so there's stories everywhere," said Martin Laird, who found himself outside looking in after finishing 31st in the FedExstandings. "It just makes for a great week, and that's what the playoffs are all about."

Ogilvy has had a rough year, missing three months with a shoulder injury and then getting a parasite that affected his stomach. He needed a birdie on his last hole at the TPC Boston just to squeak into the top 70 and get to Cog Hill; he came in 69th. As if that wasn't pressure enough, the 2006 U.S. Open champion was clinging to the last spot in the international Presidents Cup standings.

Play well, and he'd secure his spot on the team. Finish outside the top 25, and he could slip behind 2010 British Open champion Louis Oosthuizen, who didn't qualify for the playoffs.

"Obviously I was trying really hard to get on the Presidents Cup team. That was there," said Ogilvy, who has a house off a fairway at Royal Melbourne. "But I don't think it would have been beneficial to my golf to dwell on that too much. So I was just trying to go around with it's a win-win situation for me.

"I get an extra week (to play in Atlanta), or I get an extra week at home."

And as it turns out, Ogilvy's status was never really in jeopardy. He was the only player to shoot in the 60s all four rounds, and jumped all the way up to 24th in the FedExCup standings.

"Each tournament in the FedExCup has been better for me," Ogilvy said. "As I said, it's always nice to get to Atlanta. It's always a feather in your cap to be top 30. So if the year ended after next week, at least I can look and I've gotten something out of a poor year, which is nice."

A lot better than the alternative.

Villegas barely made it into the playoffs, starting at No. 109, but steadily made up ground each week and looked as if he might just make it all the way to Atlanta. He holed out from a bunker on 14 for the first of three straight birdies. He made an 8-footer on 16 to climb to 29th in the projected standings, giving a huge fist before the ball even dropped into the cup.

But he had to save par on 17 after his second shot went into a bunker, then missed a 4-footer for par on 18.

"I had four bogeys. That killed me," said Villegas, who wound up 33rd in the standings. "It is what it is."

At least Villegas knew where he stood. Masters champion Charl Schwartzel was inside the top 30 when he finished, only to be knocked out later in the day.

"What can you do?" asked Schwartzel, who started the week in 27th place but dropped out after three bogeys in his last four holes. "I gave it my best, and I suppose that's all you can do. It's going to be difficult."

Not nearly as difficult as it will be when Bill Haas looks back at Sunday.

Haas has never played in a Presidents or Ryder Cup, and wanted nothing more than to join his father in Australia. Looked to be in good shape to do it, too, beginning the day just five shots off the lead after shooting under par the first three rounds.

Despite a double bogey on the par-4 No. 4 and a bogey on No. 7, he was just 1 over when he made the turn. But he bogeyed the 12th and made another double on the par-4 13th.

"That was the beginning of the demolition there," Haas said.

He played his last four holes in 3 over.

Haas' collapse helped Furyk secure a spot on the Presidents Cup team -- not a bad consolation for missing the Tour Championship, which Furyk won last year.

"I'm disappointed I won't be at the Tour Championship," Furyk said. "(But) everyone knows I value Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup teams a lot. I take a lot of pride in making those teams, and I really want to be on the team."